Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator

In this study, the effect of age, gender, and desired speed (DS) factors on General Motors car-following (CF) behavior was investigated. DS was defined as the speed selected by the driver in free driving situation. A low-level driving simulator was used to collect data. The CF model for each driver...

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Main Authors: Ehsan Ramezani-Khansari, Masoud Tabibi, Fereidoon Moghadas Nejad, Mahmoud Mesbah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi-Wiley 2021-01-01
Series:Journal of Advanced Transportation
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/9922321
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spelling doaj-54b0ddb665404736b300220bd599ec172021-08-30T00:00:06ZengHindawi-WileyJournal of Advanced Transportation2042-31952021-01-01202110.1155/2021/9922321Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving SimulatorEhsan Ramezani-Khansari0Masoud Tabibi1Fereidoon Moghadas Nejad2Mahmoud Mesbah3Civil Engineering DepartmentRoad Traffic Injury Research CenterCivil Engineering DepartmentCivil Engineering DepartmentIn this study, the effect of age, gender, and desired speed (DS) factors on General Motors car-following (CF) behavior was investigated. DS was defined as the speed selected by the driver in free driving situation. A low-level driving simulator was used to collect data. The CF model for each driver was calibrated by genetic algorithm. Gender and DS were effective in CF behavior, while the age factor was not. The drivers’ sensitivity to the variables of speed and distance in the CF model increased with increasing the DS. The gender factor affected only the magnitude of deceleration which was higher in women. For further investigation, the effect of the desired speed on the time headway in the steady-state CF was also examined. DS factor was effective in steady-state CF behavior. As the DS increased, the time headway decreased. Examining CF threshold demonstrated that women maintained larger distance than men. Finally, it can be said that DS and gender would be more important than age to be considered in CF models.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/9922321
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ehsan Ramezani-Khansari
Masoud Tabibi
Fereidoon Moghadas Nejad
Mahmoud Mesbah
spellingShingle Ehsan Ramezani-Khansari
Masoud Tabibi
Fereidoon Moghadas Nejad
Mahmoud Mesbah
Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator
Journal of Advanced Transportation
author_facet Ehsan Ramezani-Khansari
Masoud Tabibi
Fereidoon Moghadas Nejad
Mahmoud Mesbah
author_sort Ehsan Ramezani-Khansari
title Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator
title_short Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator
title_full Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator
title_fullStr Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator
title_full_unstemmed Comparing the Effect of Age, Gender, and Desired Speed on Car-Following Behavior by Using Driving Simulator
title_sort comparing the effect of age, gender, and desired speed on car-following behavior by using driving simulator
publisher Hindawi-Wiley
series Journal of Advanced Transportation
issn 2042-3195
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In this study, the effect of age, gender, and desired speed (DS) factors on General Motors car-following (CF) behavior was investigated. DS was defined as the speed selected by the driver in free driving situation. A low-level driving simulator was used to collect data. The CF model for each driver was calibrated by genetic algorithm. Gender and DS were effective in CF behavior, while the age factor was not. The drivers’ sensitivity to the variables of speed and distance in the CF model increased with increasing the DS. The gender factor affected only the magnitude of deceleration which was higher in women. For further investigation, the effect of the desired speed on the time headway in the steady-state CF was also examined. DS factor was effective in steady-state CF behavior. As the DS increased, the time headway decreased. Examining CF threshold demonstrated that women maintained larger distance than men. Finally, it can be said that DS and gender would be more important than age to be considered in CF models.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/9922321
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AT masoudtabibi comparingtheeffectofagegenderanddesiredspeedoncarfollowingbehaviorbyusingdrivingsimulator
AT fereidoonmoghadasnejad comparingtheeffectofagegenderanddesiredspeedoncarfollowingbehaviorbyusingdrivingsimulator
AT mahmoudmesbah comparingtheeffectofagegenderanddesiredspeedoncarfollowingbehaviorbyusingdrivingsimulator
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